30+ years ago, when I was learning about op amps, I read a
manufacturer-published book on the design of op-amp circuits.

It was not only technically accurate and easy to understand, but it
was almost hysterically funny.

I think it was a Philbrick publication. But I'm not sure. I'd
like to find a copy because, as a technical writer, it's a reference
for writing "light" or "comic" documentation. It
was that good.

I browsed the list, but if it's there, I didn't see it. (And
the book might very well be from another company -- but Philbrick
rings a loud bell.)

Any help you can give would be most appreciated. Thanks in advance.

--------

From: Joe Sousa

To:William [Sommerwerck],

I am copying this email to Dan Sheingold who contributed the majority
of the material in that book, along with Philbrick contemporaries Bob
Pease, Alan Risley, and Ed Maddox.

George Philbrick was irrepressibly witty, and that set the tone for
the company. Glad to see you consulting a classic of technical writing.

Regards,

-Joe

----------------

From:William [Sommerwerck],

To: Joe Sousa

At 04:41 PM 2/24/08, you wrote:

This appears to be it. Not only is it tongue-in-cheek, but I remember
the landscape format and the photo of the vacuum-tube op amp.

What a pleasure to read a book written by engineers that is actually
readable, understandable, and witty.

Thank you!

...[snip]...

---------------------

From: Ed Maddox

And I wasn't a Philbrick contemporary, but rather a Teledyne
Philbrick Nexus employee. I was too late to work with George.

Ed Maddox

----- Original Message -----

From: Robert A. Pease

To: Joe Sousa

Cc: William Sommerwerck ; Dan Sheingold ; Ed Maddox ; Alan Risley

Sent: Monday, February 25, 2008 7:07 AM

Subject: Re: Philbrick book on designing opamp circuits

Joe Sousa wrote:

William,

I am copying this email to Dan Sheingold who contributed the majority
of the material in that book, along with Philbrick contemporaries Bob
Pease, Alan Risley, and Ed Maddox.

George Philbrick was irrepressibly witty, and that set the tone for
the company.

*** Hi, guys, I contributed a
very small part of that Apps Manual. I don't recall if I
did contribute anything more than the F-to-V
converter. Certainly not much. So, about 1/2 page. I did
very little of the proof-reading or checking.

I don't recall if Al Risley contributed any. I'm
not sure if he was even at Philbrick in 1965. Ed
Maddox was definitely not. He was a Nexus man.

Bruce Seddon contributed some. Dan Sheingold
might recall who did a lot. But George
contributed the STYLE. Dan polished all the
circuits into the style that George led with. Then I am sure
George did the final editting, to make sure he made the right
points, with the right words, the right phrasing, and the right FEEL.

Of course, some of the circuits and ideas
came out of the old "Octal" Apps Manual
for K2-W's, and a lot of that was
George's. So that's where it came from. Did
Bob Malter contribute any? He was deceased by the
time that Manual came out, but he might have
originated some of the apps.

Did Billy Fitzgerald do the art? Not sure.
Was Ted Gams involved at all, in the Design?
I'd guess that Dan, George, and Billy put in the right layout
and the right visuals.

Do some people find it rather funny? I never
thought of it as funny. The text was odd and
Philbrickian. A little stilted, but that is OK.
If somebody is not content with printing the pages off
the web, you could try to buy a real one off ebay. The
last I heard, the going rate was $300.50. Pretty steep
for a $3 book - - a good investment! You
might say, keeping up with Inflation at 12% per year!!

/ Best regards. / rap

-------------------

From Dan Sheingold:

At 10:55 AM 2/26/08, Sheingold, Dan wrote:

There's a history of the book (and GAP/R) on its inside cover, which
I updated